What subject do we know Professor Jameson teaches?
第1题
M:Ok,but I'd like to take the matters up again at the end of the meeting.
Q:What does the man imply?
(16)
A.The subject deserves more discussion later.
B.The materials being discussed should be kept upstairs.
C.He'd like to end the meeting early.
D.What they do at the end of the meeting doesn't matter.
第2题
What is the subject of this message?
A.To inform. of an order cancellation
B.To notify of an order being shipped
C.To offer a discount on parts
D.To inform. that an order has been delayed
第3题
听力原文:M: Is it still raining outside?
F: No, but the wind is still blowing.
What do we know about the weather?
A.It's still raining.
B.The wind has stopped.
C.The rain stopped.
第4题
To : Company all employees
From: Personnel Department
Subject: Retirement of CEO
After thirty five years with our firm, our CEO, Jack Wallace will retire from his position. We absolutely know that Jack's tireless work, creative ideas and excellent leadership abilities which played an extremely important role in making our company, S&J one of the leading companies in the industry.
He will still work as a member of the board of directors after his retirement. His last day is next Friday. So we will have a retirement party for him. Please, join the party to say good-bye to our most cherished member. We wish Jack the best of luck.
What did Jack do at S&J?
A.He contributed to making S&J one of the leading companies.
B.He headed the personnel department.
C.He was responsible for finance.
D.He fired many employees.
第5题
What are the employees asked to do?
A.Install new software programs.
B.Read instruction materials.
C.Create their own ID and password.
D.Purchase a computer by April 1 st.
第6题
?Read the memo below from the CEO of your company.
MEMO
To: International Sales staff
From: CEO
Date: 30/10/04
Subject: 50th anniversary celebration
I think it would be a good idea to include some of our overseas clients on the guest list for the formal event we are planning as part of the company's 50th anniversary celebrations.
Could all International Sales staff write to their most important clients to invite them to the event.
?Write a letter to an overseas client, Mrs Johannson:
?inviting her to the event
?giving her the date of the event
?giving details of what will happen at the event
?explaining what overnight accommodation is available.
?Write 60-80 words on your Answer Sheet.
?Do not include any postal addresses.
第7题
听力原文:M: Our professor is iii today, so we have no classes.
F: Isn't that nice? Do you know how long he will be absent?
What is the possible relationship between the two speakers?
A.Husband and wife.
B.Teacher and Student.
C.Classmates.
第8题
Before we administer first aid to a victim, it is very important for us
A.to refer to all kinds of handbooks on first aid.
B.to make sure what to do and what not to do.
C.to remove the ring or bracelet he may be wearing.
D.to take him to a hospital at once.
第9题
(5)There is, of course, another side to the question of how to make the best use of one's time at university.(6)This is the case of the student who excels in a particular branch of learning.(7)He is immediately accepted by the university of his choice, and spends his three or four years becoming a specialist, emerging with a first-class Honour Degree and very little knowledge of what the rest of the world is all about.(8)It therefore becomes more and more important that, if students are not to waste their opportunities, there will have to be much more detailed information about courses and more advice.Only in this way can we be sure that we are not to have, on the one hand, a band of specialists ignorant of anything outside of their own subject, and on the other hand, an ever increasing number of graduates qualified in subject for which there is little or no demand in the working world.
第10题
阅读材料,回答题。
How does Science Proceed?
How exactly does science work? How do scientists go about "doing" science? Ordinarily we think science proceeds in a straightforward way. Ideally, scientists make observations, formulate hypotheses, and test those hypotheses by making further observations. When there is difference between what is observed and what is predicted by the hypothesis, the hypothesis is reviewed. Science proceeds in this way, which is a gradual method of finding the best fit between observation and prediction.
But this idealized version of how one "does" science is naive.Although science demands proof that observations made by one observer be observable by other observers using the same methods.It is by no means clear that even when confronted with identical phenomena different observers will report identical observations.
And it is most certain that, even if the same observations are made, the conclusions as to the meaning of the observations frequently differ.
The fact is that all of us scientists included, see differently. Variations in human perception are well known and have been studied extensively. Distortions in perceptions are frequently seen among observers, even though they may be in identical settings viewing identical phenomena. A documented misperception from history can be found in the experience of Darwin.His ship, Beagle, after anchoring off the Patagonian coast, sent off a landing party in small rowboats. Amazingly, the Patagonian natives watching from shore were blind to the Beagle, but could easily see the tiny rowboats. They have no prior experience of huge sailing ships, but small rowing vessels were an everyday part of their life. Rowboats fit their model of the world but huge ships did not.Their model determined their perceptions.
Our ideas that science proceeds on an utterly objective and straightforward basis ignores the distortions of reality imposed by our own perceptual apparatus. In many cases we see what we have been trained to see, what we are used to seeing. If a subject is fitted with special glasses that are designed to invert the visual field, at first the subject sees everything upside down. After a period of time, as the glasses continue to be worn, a correction is made by our perceptual mechanism and the image is flipped, so that the world once again appears erect.
What is the main idea of the passage? 查看材料
A.The research methods used by scientists
B.Observation and human perception variation
C.The relation between hypothesis and observation
D.The human perceptual mechanism